2018
DOI: 10.1177/0969776418771435
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Spatial imaginaries and selective in/visibility: Mediterranean neighbourhood and the European Union’s engagement with civil society after the ‘Arab Spring’

Abstract: As part of a repertoire of the European Union’s (EU’s) geopolitical practices, the imaginary of Mediterranean Neighbourhood is a means with which to manage dissonance between the EU’s self-image as a normative power, changing political situations in the region and the Realpolitik of security. We argue that this also involved a ‘politics of in/visibility’ that promotes democratization and social modernization through structured cooperation while engaging selectively with local stakeholders. In directing attenti… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…Conversely, the genuinely local grassroots organisations, which are less organised and resourceful, have a limited international profile (or none at all), and are often unable or unwilling to access EU funding and participate in decision-making processes, were involved in our research to a more limited extent. This proves that, as observed by other authors, the EU support to South-Med civil society is selective, and targets specific actors with whom the EU deems it can worknamely national elites and well-established, professionalised and westernised CSOs (Bürkner & Scott, 2018).…”
Section: Analysing Stakeholders' Policy Frames In the Field Of Migrationsupporting
confidence: 78%
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“…Conversely, the genuinely local grassroots organisations, which are less organised and resourceful, have a limited international profile (or none at all), and are often unable or unwilling to access EU funding and participate in decision-making processes, were involved in our research to a more limited extent. This proves that, as observed by other authors, the EU support to South-Med civil society is selective, and targets specific actors with whom the EU deems it can worknamely national elites and well-established, professionalised and westernised CSOs (Bürkner & Scott, 2018).…”
Section: Analysing Stakeholders' Policy Frames In the Field Of Migrationsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Apparently, the EU has so far displayed a contradictory strategy towards civil society stakeholders in South-Med countries, and Tunisia in particular. Besides involving CSOs on a selective and ad hoc basis (Bürkner & Scott, 2018), the EU has tasked local civil society with a dual function: on the one hand to cooperate in the implementation of EU policies (e.g., the MP), thus legitimising them despite their Euro-centric, top-down and securitising approach; and on the other hand to promote human rights and democracy at the domestic levelwith the risk to create a short circuit between the two functions. But the EU does not seem to have so far tasked civil society actors with an actual co-production function in the migration policy field.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, “trade unions or professional associations […] often do not self‐identify as NGOs, but rather as CSOs” (Tomlinson, 2013, p. 214), and some regard NGOs “as a subset of CSOs involved in development cooperation, albeit often one with no clear boundaries” (Tomlinson, 2013, p. 214). According to Bürkner and Scott (2018), “‘CSO’ […] denominates all forms of civil self‐organisation that may assume formalised structures but often remain informal and temporary,” as opposed to those “‘non‐governmental organisations’ operating either at a national level within a formalised organisational structure […] or at a global scale as part of a larger organisation” (p. 11). This paper uses both terms, either jointly (“CSOs/NGOs”) or separately.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, migration-related activities in countries of transit and origin can be delegated to IOs (Lavenex, 2016;Wunderlich, 2012) and NGOs/CSOs. More specifically, the EU and its member states have identified NGOs/CSOs in the Southern Mediterranean neighbourhoodespecially the more professionalised and westernised ones (Bürkner & Scott, 2018)-"as natural partners" (Bürkner, 2018, p. 180) in the process of region-building of which the externalisation of migration control is a part: European "funding instruments for migration-related projects in third countries [show] a strong geographical focus on […] the southern Mediterranean" (Den Hertog, 2016, p. 1), and "[i]n many cases, […] the recipients are actually NGOs" (El Qadim, 2019, p. 353; see also Irrera, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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